Abstract
Ionotropic glutamate receptors (iGluRs) mediate fast excitatory synaptic transmission in the central nervous system. Upon agonist binding, an iGluR opens to allow the flow of cations and subsequently enters into a desensitized state. It remains unclear how agonist binding to the ligand-binding domain (LBD) is transmitted to the transmembrane domain (TMD) for channel activation and desensitization. Here we report molecular dynamics simulations of an AMPA (α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionic acid)-subtype iGluR in explicit water and membrane. Channel opening and closing were observed in simulations of the activation and desensitization processes, respectively. The motions of the LBD–TMD linkers along the central axis of the receptor and in the lateral plane contributed cooperatively to channel opening and closing. The detailed mechanism of channel activation and desensitization suggested by the simulations here is consistent with existing data and may serve as a guide for new experiments and for the design of pharmacological agents.
Similar content being viewed by others
Introduction
Ionotropic glutamate receptors (iGluRs) are tetrameric, non-selective cation channels that mediate fast excitatory synaptic transmission in the central nervous system1. They are implicated in numerous central nervous system disorders, and are therefore considered as potential drug targets2. Among the four subtypes of iGluRs, α-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazole propionic acid (AMPA) receptors are characterized by rapid activation and deactivation kinetics. The molecular architecture of AMPA receptors is modular and conserved (Fig. 1). An extracellular amino-terminal domain contributes to receptor assembly and surface expression; an extracellular ligand-binding domain (LBD) has a dimer-of-dimers quaternary arrangement3, with each subunit consisting of two lobes, D1 and D2, that form a clamshell structure; a transmembrane domain (TMD) contains three membrane-spanning helices (M1, M3 and M4) and a short 'reentrant' helix (M2) per subunit, with the channel pore lined by the M3 helices4; and an intracellular carboxyl-terminal domain contains a variety of sites for post-translational modification and is involved in cytoskeletal interactions. The linking peptides between the LBD and TMD are critical for the coupling of these two domains5.
Electrophysiological and crystallographic studies have significantly advanced the structural and functional characterization of AMPA receptors1. Much of the focus is on the LBD. The binding of glutamate induces a 25° closure of the clamshell, leading to channel activation6. The structures of the isolated LBD in complex with a wide range of agonists, partial agonists and antagonists suggest a correlation between the extent of LBD closure and the degree of channel activation6,7,8,9,10,11. Interlobe twist may also influence agonist efficacy12,13,14. After channel activation, sustained presence of glutamate leads to rapid desensitization15,16. Desensitization involves significant rearrangement of the LBD; in each dimer the D1 lobes disengage from each other, whereas the D2 lobes are brought closer17,18. Destabilization of the D1–D1 dimeric interface by mutations disrupting the E486/K493 salt bridge15 or by G725C and S729C mutations resulting in a disulphide bond in the D2–D2 dimeric interface17 increases the rate of desensitization; conversely, stabilization of the D1–D1 interface by the binding of allosteric modulators19 or introducing cation-π interactions20 slows desensitization. The recent structural determination of the nearly full-length (missing the C-terminal domain) Glu2A AMPA receptor in the resting state was a milestone21. For the first time, it became possible to infer the quaternary-level rearrangements of the LBD upon channel activation and desensitization. It was clear that the motions would be much more substantial for the two distal D2 lobes than for the two proximal D2 lobes.
Some experimental data exist regarding the gating motions of the LBD–TMD linking peptides5,22,23 and the TMD itself4. Within the M3-D2 linkers, charge reversal of the conserved residue R628, by an R→E mutation, suppressed desensitization, whereas an opposite charge reversal E→R mutation at the neighbouring position 627 enhanced desensitization5. Accessibility of substituted cysteines in the pore-lining M3 helix in the presence and absence of glutamate4 provides valuable data for testing gating models. However, how the motions of the LBD are transmitted to the TMD and the motions of the TMD itself upon channel activation and desensitization are still largely unknown. In particular, although the structure of the M1–M3 helices of the GluA2 receptor in the resting state superimposes well with the closed conformation of a potassium channel, whether the similarity extends to gating motions of the transmembrane helices is still contentious4,21.
Here we report an atomistic mechanism for the activation and desensitization of the GluA2 receptor suggested by targeted molecular dynamics simulations. Previous simulation studies were limited to isolated regions such as the LBD13,24,25,26 or LBD–TMD linking peptides27. We studied a functioning receptor, consisting of the LBD, the linking peptides and the TMD, in a membrane. We found that, in response to a change of the LBD from the antagonist-bound conformation to the agonist-bound conformation, the motions of the M3-D2 linkers had three components: upward movement as a whole; opposite rotations of the two diagonal pairs; and disparate outward expansions of the two pairs. The upward and outward motions of the linkers lifted the C-terminals of the M3 helices into the water–membrane interface and the disparate lateral motions of the linkers broke the fourfold symmetry of the M3 helices, with one diagonal pair experiencing much greater outward expansion than the other, leading to channel opening. Starting from this putative activated state, the ensuing motions of the LBD–TMD linkers and the TMD upon a change of the LBD from the activated conformation to a desensitized conformation largely reversed those observed upon channel activation. This detailed mechanism of channel activation and desensitization is supported by existing data4,5,10,22,28,29,30,31.
Results
The GluA2 receptor
The GluA2 receptor in the present study contained residues K393 to K817, which make up the LBD, the LBD–TMD linkers and the TMD (Fig. 1). Its structure in the resting state (that is, with an antagonist bound to the LBD) was taken from Protein Data Bank (PDB) entry 3KG2 (ref. 21). The LBD in this structure has twofold symmetry (consistent with the dimer-of-dimers arrangement), whereas the TMD has fourfold symmetry. Following the nomenclature in the PDB entry, we refer to the two diagonal subunits that have proximal D2 lobes as chains A and C and the other two diagonal subunits, with distal D2 lobes, as chains B and D. In the LBD, chains A and D form one dimer and chains B and C form another dimer.
Quaternary arrangements of the LBD tetramers
Our overall strategy was to move the LBD from the antagonist-bound conformation first to the agonist-bound conformation and then to the desensitized conformation and observe how the LBD–TMD linkers and the TMD moved in response in the molecular dynamics simulations. The LBD targets in the activated and desensitized states were based on the structures of the isolated LBD bound with glutamate in the absence (PDB entry 1FTJ)6 and presence of the S729C mutation (PDB entry 2I3W)17, respectively.
We needed the LBD targets as tetramers, but the isolated LBD structures only unambiguously defined dimers. In building the tetrameric LBD target in the activated state, we preserved its quaternary arrangement in 3KG2 as much as possible. This conservative approach seems justified, as we were able to find a tetramer in the 1FTJ crystal that has a Cα root-mean-square deviation (RMSD) of just 4.3 Å from the 3KG2 LBD tetramer. This 1FTJ LBD tetramer served as our target in the activated state. On the other hand, in the 2I3W crystal, the tetramer closest to the putative activated-state LBD has a Cα RMSD of 8.4 Å. Again taking a conservative approach, we obtained an LBD tetramer in the desensitized state by superimposing residues P632-E772 (known as S2) of the 2I3W dimer to the corresponding portions of the 3KG2 tetramer twice, once to each of the two dimers of the latter. This putative desensitized LBD has a Cα RMSD of 4.4 Å from the putative activated LBD.
Sobolevsky et al.21 also built models for LBD tetramers in the activated and desensitized states by superimposing to the LBD in the resting state, but the superposition was on a monomer basis. We prefer the models obtained on the tetramer (for the activated state) and the dimer (for the desensitized state) bases, as they incorporated information at the quaternary level as much as possible. Still, the movements of P632, the first residue entering D2 after the M3-D2 linker, presented by our LBD models upon activation and desensitization (Supplementary Fig. S1) are qualitatively similar to those presented by the LBD models described by Sobolevsky et al.
Gating motions that led to channel activation
Starting from the resting state of the GluA2 receptor, we forced the LBD to move from the antagonist-bound conformation to the agonist-bound conformation and followed the resulting motions of the rest of the receptor over a period of 98 ns. In the resting state, the channel pore is blocked at three positions along the M3 helices: T617, A621 and T625 (Figs 1c and 2a,b). During the simulation modelling the activation process, these three positions were no longer blocked (Fig. 2a,b). We now describe the motions that led to the channel opening. For convenience, we decompose these motions into those along the central axis of the receptor and those in the lateral plane; and we further decompose the lateral motions into expansion or contraction in the radial direction and rotation around the central axis. In describing these motions, we distinguish between the A and C chains (with proximal D2 lobes) from the B and D chains (with distal D2 lobes).
In the resting state, the connector between the tips (K393 and P632) of the D1 and D2 lobes of a 'distal' LBD monomer is nearly parallel to the central axis (angle at 17°), whereas the counterpart of a 'proximal' LBD monomer is more tilted (angle at 43°; Fig. 3a). On the other hand, the M3-D2 linker (V626-S631) in a distal subunit is close to being horizontal (and nearly fully extended); in a proximal subunit the M3 helix is longer by one turn compared with the counterpart in a distal subunit, and the remaining short linker (V630-S631) continues in the mostly vertical direction.
In our simulation, the closure of the LBD clamshells upon agonist binding led to upward translation of the TMD as a whole, towards the D1 lobes of the LBD (Figs 2c and 3a). For the proximal subunits, the closure of the LBD clamshells lifted up the D2 tips and the closely connected M3 helices (Fig. 3a). For the distal subunits, the closure of the LBD clamshells lifted up the D2 tips to a lesser extent but moved them significantly away from the central axis (further described below). As a result, the M3 helices had to move up so that the two ends of the M3-D2 linkers were almost even to minimize extending these already nearly fully extended linkers. Therefore, different routes of the proximal and distal subunits led to the same consequence that the M3 helices (and the TMD as a whole) moved upwards by 5 Å towards the D1 lobes (Fig. 2c). As a result, the top blocking position, at T625, moved to the water–membrane interface (Fig. 2a).
Although the decrease in the D1-TMD distance seemed easy to understand given that the D1 and D2 lobes closed up upon agonist binding, it was not immediately clear as to why the TMD had to move upwards to get closer to the D1 lobes. Conceivably, the TMD could have stayed in place but the D1 and D2 lobes moved downwards. The reason that scenario could not occur is that the distal lobes were anchored on top of the membrane (see Fig. 2a) and so could not move downwards.
In the lateral plane, the motions of the M3-D2 linkers (V626-S631) upon agonist binding can be described as outward expansions and opposite rotations of the proximal and distal pairs. Upon superimposing the four D1 lobes of the activated receptor against the counterparts of the resting receptor, the projected view of the linkers in the lateral plane is shown in Figure 4a. Using residue V630 as a representative, the lengths of the proximal and distal diagonals, plotted in Figure 4b, increased by 9 and 14 Å, respectively. The rotation angles of the proximal and distal diagonals upon activation are plotted in Figure 4c. They reached 30° in the clockwise direction and 7° in the counterclockwise direction, respectively. The opposite rotations brought the angle between the proximal and distal diagonals closer to 90°, which is the value in the fourfold symmetric TMD in the resting state (Supplementary Fig. S2). These lateral motions of the M3-D2 linkers tracked those of P632, the D2 residue directly connected to an M3-D2 linker (Supplementary Fig. S1).
In the resting state, the receptor undergoes an abrupt transition from the twofold symmetry of the M3-D2 linkers to the fourfold symmetry of the TMD, as indicated by the angle, θ, between the proximal and distal diagonals (Supplementary Fig. S2). This abrupt transition in θ is maintained in part by the tightly packed M3 helices. In the activated state, the pore is widened, and therefore the M3 helices would have room to move and it would be difficult to maintain an abrupt transition in θ. This conundrum was solved by the opposite rotations of the proximal and distal M3-D2 linkers, whereby the change in θ from the M3 helices to the M3-D2 linkers became much more gradual in the activated state (Supplementary Fig. S2). It appears that the abrupt transition in θ in the resting state builds up a strain, which serves as a driving force for the gating motions of the top portion of the M3 bundle during the activation process.
Although the opposite rotations of the proximal and distal M3-D2 linkers allowed the top portion of the M3 bundle to maintain θ close to 90°, the M3 bundle in the activated state still deviated from the fourfold symmetry. The disparate outward expansions of the proximal and distal linkers were mirrored by the lateral motions of the M3 C-terminals (Supplementary Fig. S3). For example, the two proximal T625 residues moved 4.5 Å apart, but the two distal T625 residues moved 9.5 Å apart. In addition, the tilt angles of the proximal and distal M3 helices changed in opposite directions, decreasing in the proximal pair and increasing in the distal pair (Fig. 5a). The opposite rotations of the M3-D2 linkers were directly responsible for the opposite changes in the M3 tilt angles. Because the N-terminal portion of each M3 helix is wrapped from the outside by the M1 helix of the same subunit and the M4 helix of an adjacent subunit, the rotation of the M3 helix was largely correlated with the rotations of the latter two helices (Fig. 5a,b).
On the basis of the superposition of the M1–M3 helices of the GluA2 receptor with pore-forming helices of a potassium channel, Sobolevsky et al.21 suggested that, similar to the potassium channel, the GluA2 receptor may open by bending the M3 helices. In our simulation, the C-terminal half of one distal M3 helix showed some sign of bending (Fig. 5c), but by no means was the bending solely responsible for the pore opening. As noted previously by Sobolevsky et al.,4 the C-terminal half of the M3 helix lacks glycines and hence is expected to be relatively rigid.
Although in describing the motion of the LBD upon agonist binding we only noted the most prominent feature, that is, the closure of the clamshells, our LBD target for the activated state actually had a small interlobe twist. The latter received attention in recent studies12,13,14. However, we could not tease out the separate contributions of clamshell closure and interlobe twist in our model for channel activation.
Gating motions that led to channel desensitization
Upon activation, the D1 lobes of an LBD dimer stay engaged but the D2 lobes move apart in closing the clamshells. Upon desensitization, the D1 lobes disengage, whereas the D2 lobes move closer. Consequently, the arrangement of the D2 lobes in the desensitized state partially returns to that in the resting state. The four D2 lobes in our desensitized LBD model superimposed to those in the resting state to 3.5 Å, whereas to those in the activated state to 4.6 Å.
In our simulation of the desensitization process, the LBD–TMD linkers and the TMD moved in directions mostly opposite to those observed during the activation process. The reversal in motional directions can largely be attributed to the partial returning of the desensitized D2 lobes to the conformation of the resting state. Now the TMD as a whole moved downwards by 2.5 Å away from the D1 lobes (Figs 2c and 3b), pushing the top blocking position T625 back towards the membrane (Fig. 2a). In the lateral plane (Fig. 4d), the lengths of the diagonals connecting the proximal and distal M3-D2 linkers decreased by 5.5 and 8.5 Å, respectively (Fig. 4e), and they rotated counterclockwise by 8° and clockwise by 7° (Fig. 4f). The C-terminals of the M3 helices also showed significant inward contraction (Supplementary Fig. S3), leading to the closing of the channel pore (Fig. 2a,b).
Validation by cysteine modification and coordination data
Sobolevsky et al.4 measured the activation-induced change in accessibility of modifying agents to substituted cysteines along the M3 helices. Previously, we have used such data to validate an activation model obtained by molecular dynamics simulations32. Here we use the data of Sobolevsky et al. to test our structure for the activated GluA2 receptor. The basic idea is to compute the solvent accessible areas of a given residue in the resting state and in the activated state, and compare the change against the cysteine modification data at that position.
The cysteine modification data show that, upon channel activation, the M3 C-terminal residues L610, I613, S614, T617, N619, A621 and F623 have increased accessibility, whereas L620 has decreased accessibility. As shown in Figure 6, these changes are reproduced well by the differences in accessible area between our activated structure and the resting structure, with a correlation coefficient of 0.84. L610, I613, S614, T617 and A621 face the pore, so it is easy to see why they became more accessible upon channel activation. N619 and F623 project outwards and are accessible to the solvent on the outside. In our activated model, the outward expansion of M3 pushed these two residues further into the solvent on the outside and hence made them more accessible. On the other hand, L620 also projects outwards but faces the pre-M1 helix in the same subunit (Supplementary Fig. S4). As M3 expanded outwards, the spacing between L620 and the pre-M1 helix was reduced and hence L620 became less accessible.
Sobolevsky et al.28 further probed the distances of the four cysteines substituting A621 in the activated state by Cd2+ coordination. Their data suggest that the four substituted cysteines have twofold symmetry, with two neighbouring pairs close enough for Cd2+ coordination but the remaining two pairs further apart. Our structure for the activated state agrees very well with this observation (see Supplementary Fig. 3): the distances of Cβ atoms of A621 residues were 4–5 Å between chains A and B and between chains C and D, but 6–7 Å between chains A and D and between chains C and B.
Discussion
On the basis of molecular dynamics simulations, we have obtained atomic-level conformational changes that putatively lead to activation and desensitization of an AMPA receptor. The suggested functional mechanism, involving several unique features, can explain a number of observations on the channel activity of the receptor.
The functional mechanism of the AMPA receptor suggested by our simulations is illustrated in Figure 7. Upon glutamate binding, the closure of the D2 lobes towards the D1 lobes pulls apart the distal pair of M3-D2 linkers and, to a lesser extent, the proximal counterpart. At the same time, the two pairs of diagonal linkers rotate away from each other. As a result, the TMD translates upwards, and the C-terminals of the M3 helices expand outwards, leading to channel opening.
Under sustained presence of glutamate, the two D1 lobes in each LBD dimer disengage and the D2 lobes approach each other, partially restoring the relative arrangement of the latter in the resting state. Consequently, the conformational changes of the LBD–TMD linkers and the TMD in the activation process are largely reversed, leading to channel desensitization.
Figure 6 shows that our model for the activated state reproduces well the observed changes in accessibility of key residues upon channel activation. Our mechanistic model also explains other observations on channel activity. Yelshansky et al.5 investigated the role of the M3-D2 linkers in channel activity and found that reversing the charge on the conserved residue R628 disrupted desensitization, and charge reversal in the opposite direction on the neighbouring E627 enhanced desensitization. They hypothesized that unspecified electrostatic interactions of R628 with the LBD promoted the channel's entrance to the desensitized state, whereas opposite interactions of E627 hindered it. In our structures for the activated and desensitized states, we did not find any systematic differences in short-range or long-range interactions of R628 and E627 with the rest of the receptor. On the other hand, on going from the activated state to the desensitized state, the proximal M3-D2 linkers moved towards the membrane (Fig. 8a). Although our simulations were done in a membrane consisting of purely zwitterionic lipids, it can be deduced that, in a cell membrane containing negatively charged lipids, electrostatic interactions of R628 and E627 with nearby phosphate groups of the lipids would be significantly strengthened on going to the desensitized state (Fig. 8b). Therefore, a charge reversal of R628 would disfavour the desensitized state, whereas a charge reversal of E627 would have the opposite effect. We thus propose that the electrostatic interactions of R628 and E627 with the membrane explain the mutational effects observed by Yelshansky et al. on channel desensitization.
Using mutagenesis, Balannik et al.22 identified four residues affecting the binding of two non-competitive antagonists, and showed that these antagonists have lower affinity for the activated receptor than for the resting or desensitized receptor. In the resting GluA2 receptor, the identified residues are clustered around a binding pocket, putatively the binding site of the non-competitive antagonists (Supplementary Fig. 5). In our structure for the activated state, these residues move apart and the binding pocket becomes partially occluded by a portion of the outwardly moved D2-M4 linker, thus explaining the lower binding affinity of the non-competitive antagonists.
The extent of LBD closure induced by ligand binding appears to be correlated with the degree of channel activation1,6,10,21. Agonists induce the greatest LBD closure and open the channel to the greatest extent; partial agonists induce moderate closure of the LBD clamshells and open the channel to a moderate extent; antagonists keep the LBD in the open conformation and the channel closed. The D2 lobes are connected to the pore-forming M3 helices by the M3-D2 linkers; in our model for channel activation, the closure of the D2 lobes is directly translated into the outward expansion of the M3 C-terminals and channel opening. Therefore, the correlation between the extent of LBD closure and the degree of channel activation is easily explained.
A related observation is that single-channel currents show step-like transitions between adjacent conductance levels10,29,30,31, suggesting that agonist binding to a subset of the four monomers of the LBD can trigger sub-conductance currents. In our model, closure of a single LBD monomer can lead to outward expansion of the M3 helix in the same subunit, possibly explaining the sub-conductance currents. The four subunits, however, are not equal: the subunits with the distal M3-D2 linkers contribute more to channel conductance compared with the proximal counterparts.
The gating motions of the M3 and M4 helices in our model are tightly coupled (Fig. 5b). This tight coupling perhaps in part explains why removal of the M4 helix results in loss of channel function33. It may also explain the observation that disruption of the interactions between M3 and M4 helices alters channel activation and desensitization kinetics34.
Several features in the proposed model for the activation and desensitization of the GluA2 receptor are worth noting. First, the distal M3-D2 linkers and M3 helices and their proximal counterparts undergo disparate motions. The distal subunits experience greater outward expansion and inward contraction, and hence contribute more to channel activation and desensitization.
Second, our mechanistic model involves the membrane. The distal M3-D2 linkers are anchored on top of the membrane and move outwards within a lateral plane during activation, pulling the M3 helices upwards; the motions are reversed during desensitization. We further propose that long-range electrostatic interactions between charged residues in the M3-D2 linkers and the membrane have a role in channel activation and desensitization.
Third, in our model, the motions that directly lead to pore opening and closing are essentially confined to the C-terminals of the M3 helices. It is interesting that the sequence of this region, SYTANLAAF, is highly conserved, raising the prospect that a common gating mechanism may operate for all iGluRs. This prospect is reinforced by the finding that the GluN1-GluN2A heteromeric NMDA receptor has glutamate-binding sites on the GluN2A subunits that are very similar to those in the GluA2 receptor35. The GluN2A subunits occupy the distal positions in the M3-D2 linker region, and would thus have a predominant gating role according to our model. Importantly, the Lurcher mutation occurs in the conserved SYTANLAAF motif.
The atomistic model developed here for the activation and desensitization of the GluA2 receptor can be further validated by new experiments. For example, the predicted changes in solvent accessibility of residues outside the C-terminal of the M3 helix in our activated and desensitized structures can be tested against accessibility of substituted cysteines. On the basis of the activated and desensitized structures, we can predict how mutations may affect channel activation and desensitization, and the predictions can be interrogated by electrophysiological data.
The D1–D1 dimeric interface has been the primary binding site for allosteric modulators19. Our activated and desensitized structures open new target sites for designing allosteric modulators. Ligands that show preferential binding to regions of the receptor, such as the LBD–TMD linkers22 or the TMD, in either the activated state or the desensitized state will allow channel activation and desensitization kinetics to be altered in desired directions.
Methods
System setup
The starting structure of the GluA2 receptor was taken from PDB 3KG2 (ref. 21), with all missing side chains and loops built and hydrogen atoms added. The LBD targets in the activated and desensitized states were based on the structures of the isolated LBD bound with glutamate in the absence (PDB entry 1FTJ)6 and presence of the S729C mutation (PDB entry 2I3W)17, respectively. In these isolated LBD structures, K506 and P632 are connected by a two-residue linker (with sequence GT). Comparison with the LBD of the full-length 3KG2 shows that the two-residue linker does not introduce significant distortion. The D2 lobe of 1FTJ and the counterpart of 3KG2 have an RMSD of only 0.8 Å. 3KG2 has a relatively low resolution (3.6 Å), and the resolution of the M3-D2 linkers, which turned out to have a prominent role in our mechanistic model, are probably even lower. However, what matters most to our model is the twofold symmetry of these linkers, which should not be affected by the low resolution of 3KG2. The S729C mutant is regarded as a model for the desensitized state, through destabilizing the D1–D1 dimeric interface, although it may differ subtly from the native structure of the desensitized state17.
Molecular dynamics simulations
Both regular32,36,37 and targeted molecular dynamics simulations38 have been very useful in suggesting gating motions of another family of ligand-gated ion channels, the nicotinic acetylcholine receptors. Targeted molecular dynamics simulations39, by making use of mechanistic knowledge, are able to bridge the gap in timescales between regular molecular dynamics simulations (tens of ns) and channel gating (ms). Given the rich information on the conformational changes of AMPA-subtype LBDs, this approach was particularly suited here.
In the molecular dynamics simulations, the TMD of the receptor was embedded in a bilayer of 1-palmytoil-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphatidylcholine (POPC) lipids (313 per leaflet) and the receptor–lipid system was solvated by 105,231 water molecules, 114 sodium ions and 118 chloride ions. The extra four anions served to neutralize the whole system, which had a total of 426,461 atoms. The bilayer was prepared by trimming a 2×2 replication of a pre-equilibrated POPC bilayer with 128 lipids per leaflet, downloaded from CHARMM-GUI40.
NAMD version 2.7b3 (ref. 41) was used to run the simulations. Before the simulation of the activation process, the system was energy minimized (1,000 steps), gradually heated to 300 K (over 100 ps under constant NVT) and equilibrated under constant NPγT (pressure at 1 atm and surface tension at 20 dyn cm−1 (ref. 42)) for 10 ns. During this process, the backbone atoms of the receptor were restrained (force constant at 20 kcal mol−1 Å−2). In the simulation of the activation process, the LBD was steered towards the activated target by an RMSD-based restraint potential (force constant at 20,000 kcal mol−1 Å−2). The simulation was run for 98 ns under constant NγPT. The snapshot at 50.9 ns was used to start the simulation of the desensitized process, in which the LBD now was steered towards the desensitized target. This simulation was run for 47.6 ns. Four additional simulations with weaker restraints to the activated and desensitized targets were also run, and the results were similar.
Charmm22 all-hydrogen parameters were used43,44. Periodic boundary conditions were applied, with the particle mesh Ewald method used for treating long-range electrostatic interactions. Constant temperature was achieved by running Langevin dynamics, and constant pressure and surface tension were achieved by the Nose-Hoover Langevin piston method. The SHAKE algorithm was applied to constrain all bonds involving hydrogen atoms, which allowed for an integration time step of 2 fs.
Additional information
How to cite this article: Dong, H. et al. Atomistic mechanism for the activation and desensitization of an AMPA-subtype glutamate receptor. Nat. Commun. 2:354 doi: 10.1038/ncomms1362 (2011).
References
Traynelis, S. F. et al. Glutamate receptor ion channels: structure, regulation, and function. Pharmacol. Rev. 62, 405–496 (2010).
Bowie, D. Ionotropic glutamate receptors and CNS disorders. CNS Neurol. Disord. Drug Targets 7, 129–143 (2008).
Tichelaar, W., Safferling, M., Keinanen, K., Stark, H. & Madden, D. R. The three-dimensional structure of an ionotropic glutamate receptor reveals a dimer-of-dimers assembly. J. Mol. Biol. 344, 435–442 (2004).
Sobolevsky, A. I., Yelshansky, M. V. & Wollmuth, L. P. Different gating mechanisms in glutamate receptor and K+ channels. J. Neurosci. 23, 7559–7568 (2003).
Yelshansky, M. V., Sobolevsky, A. I., Jatzke, C. & Wollmuth, L. P. Block of AMPA receptor desensitization by a point mutation outside the ligand-binding domain. J. Neurosci. 24, 4728–4736 (2004).
Armstrong, N. & Gouaux, E. Mechanisms for activation and antagonism of an AMPA-sensitive glutamate receptor: crystal structures of the GluR2 ligand binding core. Neuron 28, 165–181 (2000).
Armstrong, N., Sun, Y., Chen, G. Q. & Gouaux, E. Structure of a glutamate-receptor ligand-binding core in complex with kainate. Nature 395, 913–917 (1998).
Hogner, A. et al. Structural basis for AMPA receptor activation and ligand selectivity: crystal structures of five agonist complexes with the GluR2 ligand-binding core. J. Mol. Biol. 322, 93–109 (2002).
Armstrong, N., Mayer, M. & Gouaux, E. Tuning activation of the AMPA-sensitive GluR2 ion channel by genetic adjustment of agonist-induced conformational changes. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 100, 5736–5741 (2003).
Jin, R., Banke, T. G., Mayer, M. L., Traynelis, S. F. & Gouaux, E. Structural basis for partial agonist action at ionotropic glutamate receptors. Nat. Neurosci. 6, 803–810 (2003).
Zhang, W., Cho, Y., Lolis, E. & Howe, J. R. Structural and single-channel results indicate that the rates of ligand binding domain closing and opening directly impact AMPA receptor gating. J. Neurosci. 28, 932–943 (2008).
Holm, M. M., Lunn, M. L., Traynelis, S. F., Kastrup, J. S. & Egebjerg, J. Structural determinants of agonist-specific kinetics at the ionotropic glutamate receptor 2. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 102, 12053–12058 (2005).
Bjerrum, E. J. & Biggin, P. C. Rigid body essential X-ray crystallography: distinguishing the bend and twist of glutamate receptor ligand binding domains. Proteins 72, 434–446 (2008).
Birdsey-Benson, A., Gill, A., Henderson, L. P. & Madden, D. R. Enhanced efficacy without further cleft closure: reevaluating twist as a source of agonist efficacy in AMPA receptors. J. Neurosci. 30, 1463–1470 (2010).
Horning, M. S. & Mayer, M. L. Regulation of AMPA receptor gating by ligand binding core dimers. Neuron 41, 379–388 (2004).
Robert, A., Armstrong, N., Gouaux, J. E. & Howe, J. R. AMPA receptor binding cleft mutations that alter affinity, efficacy, and recovery from desensitization. J. Neurosci. 25, 3752–3762 (2005).
Armstrong, N., Jasti, J., Beich-Frandsen, M. & Gouaux, E. Measurement of conformational changes accompanying desensitization in an ionotropic glutamate receptor. Cell 127, 85–97 (2006).
Gonzalez, J., Du, M., Parameshwaran, K., Suppiramaniam, V. & Jayaraman, V. Role of dimer interface in activation and desensitization in AMPA receptors. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 107, 9891–9896 (2010).
Jin, R. et al. Mechanism of positive allosteric modulators acting on AMPA receptors. J. Neurosci. 25, 9027–9036 (2005).
Stern-Bach, Y., Russo, S., Neuman, M. & Rosenmund, C. A point mutation in the glutamate binding site blocks desensitization of AMPA receptors. Neuron 21, 907–918 (1998).
Sobolevsky, A. I., Rosconi, M. P. & Gouaux, E. X-ray structure, symmetry and mechanism of an AMPA-subtype glutamate receptor. Nature 462, 745–756 (2009).
Balannik, V., Menniti, F. S., Paternain, A. V., Lerma, J. & Stern-Bach, Y. Molecular mechanism of AMPA receptor noncompetitive antagonism. Neuron 48, 279–288 (2005).
Schmid, S. M., Korber, C., Herrmann, S., Werner, M. & Hollmann, M. A domain linking the AMPA receptor agonist binding site to the ion pore controls gating and causes lurcher properties when mutated. J. Neurosci. 27, 12230–12241 (2007).
Arinaminpathy, Y., Sansom, M. S. & Biggin, P. C. Molecular dynamics simulations of the ligand-binding domain of the ionotropic glutamate receptor GluR2. Biophys. J. 82, 676–683 (2002).
Lau, A. Y. & Roux, B. The hidden energetics of ligand binding and activation in a glutamate receptor. Nat. Struct. Mol. Biol. 18, 283–287 (2010).
Yonkunas, M. & Kurnikova, M. Characterizing the energetic states of the GluR2 ligand binding domain core-dimer. Biophys. J. 100, L5–L7 (2011).
Speranskiy, K. & Kurnikova, M. G. Modeling of peptides connecting the ligand-binding and transmembrane domains in the GluR2 glutamate receptor. Proteins 76, 271–280 (2009).
Sobolevsky, A. I., Yelshansky, M. V. & Wollmuth, L. P. The outer pore of the glutamate receptor channel has 2-fold rotational symmetry. Neuron 41, 367–378 (2004).
Rosenmund, C., Stern-Bach, Y. & Stevens, C. F. The tetrameric structure of a glutamate receptor channel. Science 280, 1596–1599 (1998).
Smith, T. C. & Howe, J. R. Concentration-dependent substate behavior of native AMPA receptors. Nat. Neurosci. 3, 992–997 (2000).
Prieto, M. L. & Wollmuth, L. P. Gating modes in AMPA receptors. J. Neurosci. 30, 4449–4459 (2010).
Yi, M., Tjong, H. & Zhou, H. X. Spontaneous conformational change and toxin binding in alpha7 acetylcholine receptor: insight into channel activation and inhibition. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 105, 8280–8285 (2008).
Schorge, S. & Colquhoun, D. Studies of NMDA receptor function and stoichiometry with truncated and tandem subunits. J. Neurosci. 23, 1151–1158 (2003).
Ren, H., Honse, Y., Karp, B. J., Lipsky, R. H. & Peoples, R. W. A site in the fourth membrane-associated domain of the N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor regulates desensitization and ion channel gating. J. Biol. Chem. 278, 276–283 (2003).
Anson, L. C., Chen, P. E., Wyllie, D. J., Colquhoun, D. & Schoepfer, R. Identification of amino acid residues of the NR2A subunit that control glutamate potency in recombinant NR1/NR2A NMDA receptors. J. Neurosci. 18, 581–589 (1998).
Brannigan, G., Henin, J., Law, R., Eckenhoff, R. & Klein, M. L. Embedded cholesterol in the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 105, 14418–14423 (2008).
Nury, H. et al. One-microsecond molecular dynamics simulation of channel gating in a nicotinic receptor homologue. Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 107, 6275–6280 (2010).
Cheng, X., Wang, H., Grant, B., Sine, S. M. & McCammon, J. A. Targeted molecular dynamics study of C-loop closure and channel gating in nicotinic receptors. PLoS Comput. Biol. 2, e134 (2006).
Schlitter, J., Engels, M. & Kruger, P. Targeted molecular dynamics: a new approach for searching pathways of conformational transitions. J. Mol. Graph. 12, 84–89 (1994).
Jo, S., Kim, T., Iyer, V. G. & Im, W. CHARMM-GUI: a web-based graphical user interface for CHARMM. J. Comput. Chem. 29, 1859–1865 (2008).
Phillips, J. C. et al. Scalable molecular dynamics with NAMD. J. Comput. Chem. 26, 1781–1802 (2005).
Gullingsrud, J. & Schulten, K. Lipid bilayer pressure profiles and mechanosensitive channel gating. Biophys. J. 86, 3496–3509 (2004).
Mackerell, A. D., Feig, M. & Brooks, C. L. Extending the treatment of backbone energetics in protein force fields: limitations of gas-phase quantum mechanics in reproducing protein conformational distributions in molecular dynamics simulations. J. Comput. Chem. 25, 1400–1415 (2004).
Feller, S. E. & MacKerell, A. D. An improved empirical potential energy function for molecular simulations of phospholipids. J. Phys. Chem. B 104, 7510–7515 (2000).
Smart, O. S., Neduvelil, J. G., Wang, X., Wallace, B. A. & Sansom, M. S. HOLE: a program for the analysis of the pore dimensions of ion channel structural models. J. Mol. Graph 14, 354–360 (1996).
Acknowledgements
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grant GM58187.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Contributions
H.-X.Z. designed the research. H.D. performed the research and analysed the data. H.D. and H.-X.Z. wrote the manuscript.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Supplementary information
Supplementary Information
Supplementary Figures S1-S5 (PDF 2456 kb)
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Dong, H., Zhou, HX. Atomistic mechanism for the activation and desensitization of an AMPA-subtype glutamate receptor. Nat Commun 2, 354 (2011). https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms1362
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms1362
This article is cited by
-
Two gates mediate NMDA receptor activity and are under subunit-specific regulation
Nature Communications (2023)
-
Probing Intersubunit Interfaces in AMPA-subtype Ionotropic Glutamate Receptors
Scientific Reports (2016)
-
Radial symmetry in a chimeric glutamate receptor pore
Nature Communications (2014)
-
Mechanical coupling maintains the fidelity of NMDA receptor–mediated currents
Nature Neuroscience (2014)
-
Structural mechanism of glutamate receptor activation and desensitization
Nature (2014)
Comments
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms and Community Guidelines. If you find something abusive or that does not comply with our terms or guidelines please flag it as inappropriate.